By: Dave Roos

15 Thanksgiving Day Facts and Trivia You Should Know

What did the Pilgrims eat at the first Thanksgiving? Which president made Thanksgiving a federal holiday? Get Thanksgiving trivia to share around the table.

A group of friends or family members hold hands around a Thanksgiving
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Published: November 12, 2018Last Updated: November 25, 2025

Thanksgiving is among America’s most beloved national holidays, but its history is all over the place. Even the details of the famous feast between the Plymouth Colony settlers and the Wampanoag Native Americans in November 1621 are sketchy. The best account we have is a letter from English settler Edward Winslow that never mentions the word “Thanksgiving” but tells of a multiday harvest celebration that included a three-day banquet with King Massasoit and 90 Wampanoag men “so we might after a more special manner rejoice together.”

Over the centuries, that briefly-mentioned feast has taken on a life of its own, with each generation adding its own take on the celebration of gratitude. These days, Thanksgiving revolves around food, family, friends and fun. We can’t help you stuff your turkey, but allow us to assist with the fun. We’ve pulled together some little-known Thanksgiving trivia so you have something to talk about around the dinner table this November.

The History of Thanksgiving

Although Thanksgiving celebrations dated back to the first European settlements in America, it was not until the 1860s that Abraham Lincoln declared the last Thursday of November to be a national holiday.

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Where was the first Thanksgiving?

Colonists and the Wampanoag tribe shared an autumn harvest feast in 1621 in Plymouth, Massachusetts, that is widely acknowledged as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations. But some historians argue that Florida, not Massachusetts, might be the true site of the first Thanksgiving in North America.

In 1565, nearly 60 years before Plymouth, a Spanish fleet came ashore and planted a cross in the sandy beach to christen the new settlement of St. Augustine. To celebrate the arrival and give thanks for God’s providence, the 800 Spanish settlers shared a festive meal with the native Timucuan people.

What did they eat at the first Thanksgiving?

The Thanksgiving meal in Plymouth probably had little in common with today’s traditional holiday spread. Although turkeys are indigenous, there’s no record of a big, roasted bird at the feast. The Wampanoag brought deer, and there would have been lots of local seafood, like mussels, lobster and bass, plus the fruits of the first Pilgrim harvest, including pumpkin. No mashed potatoes, though. Potatoes had only recently been shipped back to Europe from South America.

When was the first national Thanksgiving?

Local Thanksgiving celebrations took root, especially in New England, in the years after the first Thanksgiving. Then, in 1777, Continental Congress called for a national day of Thanksgiving—to be held December 18—to celebrate victory over the British in the Battle of Saratoga.

Not yet an established national holiday, Thanksgiving days were held sporadically over the next several decades. Presidents often announced such observances during or after major battles. In 1789, George Washington called for a national day of thanks on the last Thursday of November to commemorate the end of the Revolutionary War and the ratification of the Constitution. During the Civil War, both the Confederacy and the Union issued Thanksgiving Day proclamations following major victories.

Which president refused to recognize Thanksgiving?

Thomas Jefferson was famously the only Founding Father and early president who refused to declare days of thanksgiving and fasting in the United States. Unlike his political rivals in the Federalist Party, the Democratic-Republican believed in “a wall of separation between Church and State” and thought endorsing such celebrations as president would amount to a state-sponsored religious worship.

Thanksgiving Becomes a Holiday

Early Puritans observed Thanksgiving days of prayer, but Sarah Josepha Hale's crusade is what ultimately gave us the Thanksgiving holiday.

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When did Thanksgiving become a national holiday?

President Abraham Lincoln kickstarted the annual tradition of Thanksgiving across America in 1863. He also set the precedent for the holiday’s original timing on the final Thursday in November.

Who is the “Mother of Thanksgiving”?

Lincoln’s proclamation might not have happened without Sarah Josepha Hale. For decades, the prominent writer and magazine editor from New Hampshire led an impassioned campaign to make Thanksgiving a national holiday. She believed that such a unifying measure could help ease growing tensions in the lead-up to the Civil War. Her successful efforts earned her the nickname the “Mother of Thanksgiving.”

Which president moved the date of Thanksgiving?

Concerned that the Christmas shopping season would be cut short by a late Thanksgiving, President Franklin D. Roosevelt decreed in 1939 that Thanksgiving would be celebrated a week earlier on the fourth out of five Thursdays that November. “Franksgiving,” as it was known, was decried by Thanksgiving traditionalists and political rivals (one even compared FDR to Hitler) and refused by 23 of the 48 states.

Undeterred, Roosevelt stuck with his early Thanksgiving date in 1940 and 1941 but moved to revert the holiday to its original timing on the final Thursday of November starting in 1942. Before that could happen, Congress officially scheduled Thanksgiving to fall on the fourth Thursday in November, which has remained the holiday’s date ever since.

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How long has pumpkin pie been a traditional part of Thanksgiving?

Pumpkin pie was a staple on New England Thanksgiving tables as far back as the turn of the 18th century. Legend has it that the Connecticut town of Colchester postponed its Thanksgiving feast for a week in 1705 due to a molasses shortage. There could simply be no Thanksgiving without pumpkin pie.

When did we start canning cranberries?

Native Americans ate cranberries and used them as a potent red dye, but sweetened cranberry relish was almost certainly not on the first Thanksgiving table. The Pilgrims had long exhausted their sugar supply by November 1621. Marcus Urann canned the first jellied cranberry sauce in 1912 and eventually founded the cranberry growers cooperative known as Ocean Spray.

The Thanksgiving Turkey

Deep frying turkeys is a southern trend that is now spreading across the United States.

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What invention was sparked by a glut of Thanksgiving turkey?

In 1953, an employee at C.A. Swanson & Sons overestimated demand for Thanksgiving turkey, and the company was left with some 260 tons of extra frozen birds. As a solution, a Swanson salesman ordered 5,000 aluminum trays, devised a turkey meal and recruited an assembly line of workers to compile what would become the first TV tray dinners. A culinary hit was born. In the first full year of production, 1954, the company sold 10 million turkey TV tray dinners.

Who was the first president to pardon a turkey?

Starting in the 1940s, turkey farmers gifted the president some plump birds for the holidays, which the first family would invariably eat. President John F. Kennedy was the first American president to spare a turkey’s life. “We’ll just let this one grow,” JFK quipped in 1963. “It’s our Thanksgiving present to him.” However, the annual White House tradition of “pardoning” a turkey officially started with George H.W. Bush in 1989.

The Presidential Turkey Pardon

Presidents have been pardoning turkeys every Thanksgiving for decades, but how did this tradition get started?

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Why is football a Thanksgiving tradition?

The winning combo of football and Thanksgiving kicked off way before there was anything called the NFL. The first Thanksgiving football game was a college match between Yale and Princeton in 1876, only 13 years after Lincoln made Thanksgiving a national holiday. Soon after, Thanksgiving was picked for the date of the college football championships. By the 1890s, thousands of college and high school football rivalries were played every Thanksgiving.

How the NFL Popularized Thanksgiving Day Football

The holiday tradition took off in 1934, when the Detroit Lions hosted the unbeaten Chicago Bears in a game broadcast nationally on radio.

The Detroit Lions play the Chicago Bears on Thanksgiving Day on Thursday, Nov. 29, 1934. (Pro Football Hall of Fame via AP Images)

The holiday tradition took off in 1934, when the Detroit Lions hosted the unbeaten Chicago Bears in a game broadcast nationally on radio.

By: Chris Mueller

Which president received a raccoon as a Thanksgiving gift?

In 1926, President Calvin Coolidge received a somewhat odd Thanksgiving gift in the form of a live raccoon. Meant to be eaten (the Mississippi man who sent it called raccoon meat “toothsome”), the Coolidge family adopted the pet and named it Rebecca. Rebecca was only the latest addition to their already substantial White House menagerie that included a black bear, a wallaby, and a pygmy hippo named Billy.

History of the Thanksgiving Day Parade

The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade has been marching since 1924.

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How did the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade start?

To celebrate the expansion of its Herald Square superstore, Macy’s announced its very first “Big Christmas Parade” two weeks before Thanksgiving in 1924. The department store promised “magnificent floats,” bands and an “animal circus.” A huge success, Macy’s trimmed the parade route from its original 6 miles (today it is 2.5 miles) and signed a TV contract with NBC to broadcast the now-famous Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

When did the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade start featuring balloons?

The first oversized balloons—featuring Felix the Cat and inflated animals like elephants, tigers and a giant hummingbird—debuted in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1927. They were the brainchild of Anthony Frederick Sarg, a German-born puppeteer and theatrical designer who also created Macy’s fantastical Christmas window displays.The first balloons were filled with oxygen, not helium.

Celebration of mass in 1565

The “first Thanksgiving” is often traced to Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621, though some people give that title to a 1565 feast in Florida between Spanish settlers and the Timucua.

Credit: State Archives of Florida/Florida Memory
Thanksgiving Celebration at Plymouth Colony

The first Thanksgiving looked little like today’s feast. No potatoes and possibly no roast turkey—just deer, seafood, pumpkins and the first harvest, with the Wampanoag supplying much of the meal.

America’s first national thanksgiving marked the 1777 Battle of Saratoga victory. As president, George Washington later proclaimed another observance in 1789 after the successful conclusion of the Revolutionary War.

Universal History Archive/UIG/Getty Images
Thomas Jefferson. (Credit: VCG Wilson/Corbis via Getty Images)

Thomas Jefferson was the only early president to reject Thanksgiving proclamations, citing his belief in a strict separation of church and state.

VCG Wilson/Corbis/Getty Images

President Abraham Lincoln declared the first official Thanksgiving in 1863, after years of lobbying by Sarah Josepha Hale. The writer and abolitionist is credited with writing “Mary Had a Little Lamb.”

Michael Nicholson/Corbis/Getty Images & Kean Collection

Pumpkin pie was on New England tables as early as the 1700s. In 1705, Colchester, Connecticut, even delayed Thanksgiving a week when a molasses shortage made pies impossible.

GMVozd/Getty Images

Native Americans ate cranberries and used them as dye, but no sweet relish appeared at the 1621 feast. The Pilgrims had no sugar with which to make it. Jellied cranberry sauce arrived in 1912, leading to the founding of Ocean Spray.

Maren Caruso/Getty Images

In 1953, C.A. Swanson & Sons had 260 tons of leftover turkey. A salesman packaged it into frozen meals on aluminum trays, thus inventing the first TV dinners. By 1954, 10 million turkey trays had sold.

Fotosearch/Getty Images

Presidents once ate the turkeys gifted to them, but John F. Kennedy spared one in 1963. The official White House turkey “pardon” tradition began later, with George H.W. Bush in 1989.

Wally McNamee/Corbis/Getty Images

In 1926, President Coolidge was gifted a live raccoon for Thanksgiving dinner. Instead, his family kept her as a pet named Rebecca—joining their White House menagerie of exotic animals.

Harris & Ewing/PhotoQuest/Getty Images

In 1924, Macy’s launched its first parade on New York City streets to promote its Herald Square store. The hit event soon became the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, later shortened in route and broadcast by NBC.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Macy’s debuted its first giant parade balloons in 1927. Felix the Cat and the other inflated animals featured were filled with oxygen, not helium.

Underwood Archives/Getty Images

In 1939, President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved Thanksgiving up a week to extend holiday shopping. Dubbed “Franksgiving,” it split the nation until Congress set the holiday on the fourth Thursday in November in 1941.

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

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About the author

Dave Roos

Dave Roos is a writer for History.com and a contributor to the popular podcast Stuff You Should Know. Learn more at daveroos.com.

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Citation Information

Article Title
15 Thanksgiving Day Facts and Trivia You Should Know
Author
Dave Roos
Website Name
History
Date Accessed
November 26, 2025
Publisher
A&E Television Networks
Last Updated
November 25, 2025
Original Published Date
November 12, 2018

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